Author Topic: Bulking Up, 1968 style  (Read 9239 times)

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Bulking Up, 1968 style
« on: November 04, 2008, 10:26:18 AM »
Bulking Up --Strength & Health, November 1968. By John McCallum

Years ago, a fool proof method of bulking up was discovered. And yet gaining weight is a
major problem with bodybuilders today because the old method somehow got lost in the
shuffle. It's too bad, because gaining weight is really no problem. Bulking up is far and
away the easiest part of bodybuilding.

If you want to make use of some old gold and really apply yourself, you can gain lots of
weight. If you want to quit scratching around for something new for a couple of months,
you can get as bulky as you want.

Let's review the old method, and then we'll outline a program for you.

We can sum up the essentials very quickly. Squats and milk. That's the gist of it. Heavy
squats and lots of milk and never mind if the principle is years old.
If you're in doubt, let me tell you this. I get scores of letters from lifters around the country
who've tried the squats and milk program. They all say the same thing. They gained more
weight in a month on the squats and milk than they had in a year or more on other types of
programs.Gains of twenty to thirty pounds in a month are not uncommon. If you don't gain
at least ten pounds a month you're doing something wrong.

Lets take it piece by piece. We'll start with the milk bit.
The bodybuilders who don't gain well on milk usually fail because they misunderstand the
instructions to drink a lot of it. I've met a few men who thought a couple glasses was a lot.
That's not what I mean. When I say a lot of milk, I'm talking about a gallon or so a day. A
gallon of milk a day may sound excessive, and perhaps it is, but it's a sure guarantee of fast
gains.
You can even soup up the milk a bit by adding a few items to it; like a day's supply of
protein supplement, some ice cream or maybe some skim milk powder. Either way, just
make sure you drink a gallon a day.

The other essential to the program is the squat. This, like the milk, is often badly
misunderstood. Let's outline a bulking up routine for you, and discuss the squat in it's
proper place in the program.

You should start your program with a brief warmup. Spend about five minutes bending and
twisting, doing light repetition snatches or cleans, sit-ups, running in place, and so on.
Don't wear yourself out on the warmup. Just get your blood moving and a good feeling
about the whole thing.

Your first exercise is the press behind the neck. Do three sets of twelve reps.
Don't be frightened by the relatively high reps, and don't be stampeded into using low rep
stuff. The value of low reps has been greatly exaggerated. Moderately high reps, properly
used, provide umpteen times the growth stimulation, and are so much better for your health
that comparisons become ridiculous.

Do the presses in strict style with a medium width grip. Work hard on them and try to force
the poundage way up. There's no use kidding yourself on this or any other exercise. If you
use baby sized weights, then you can expect baby sized muscles. It's as simple as that and
there's no way out of it.
If you want respectable deltoid, trapezius, and triceps development, then you've got to work
up to about three-quarters of your body weight for the twelve reps. That means around 105
pounds for a 140 pound man, 120 pounds for a 160 pound man, 150 pounds for a 200
pound man, and so on. Nothing less will do. If you think it will, forget it.
The biggest fallacy in weight training is the foisted notion that you can build big powerful
muscles without hard work on heavy weights. You can't do it, brothers, and you're wasting
your time trying. If you're not gaining like you should, give your training poundages a long
hard look. The fault may be entirely yours.
Take a short rest after the presses. The next exercise is the big one, the key to the whole
thing, the squat. You'll do one set of twenty reps, in puff and pant style, with all the weight
you an handle.

Twenty rep squats are the solution to everybody's weight gaining problems. They'll
stimulate growth beyond belief if you work hard enough on them.
Warm up your knees with a few free squats and then start right in on the heavy stuff. Take
three huge gulping breaths between each rep. Hold the last breath and squat. Blast the air out
violently as you come erect.
Hold your head up and keep your back as flat as possible. Don't go below parallel position.
You should use a weight so heavy that the last five reps are doubtful. I continually get
letters from trainees complaining about their slow gains in bodyweight. Eventually I find
out they're using weights in the squat that an old lady with arthritis could lift.
You've gotta force the poundage. 150% of your bodyweight for twenty reps is rock bottom
minimum. That means 300 pounds for a 200 pound man. And remember, that's a minimum
figure. You should figure on going well above that.
As soon as you finish the squats, do twenty pullovers with a light weight. Twenty pounds or
so is plenty. All you want to do is give your rib box a good stretch.

The next exercise is the bench press. This exercise has been published enough so that you
shouldn't need any special instruction on it.
Do three sets in a rather loose style.
The next exercise is bent over rowing. Do three sets of fifteen in very strict style. Rest your
forehead on a block or lean it against a post or something to make sure you don't cheat. Use
a medium width grip and pull the bar to your lower abdomen.

The next exercise is the stiff legged deadlift. One set of fifteen reps. Do the deadlifts
standing on a bench or a high block so that you can go all the way down without the plates
hitting the floor. Concentrate on a full extension and contraction of your lower back.
Don't set the weight down when you finish the fifteen reps. Stand erect and do shoulder
shrugs until you grip gives out. You should be able to get at least a dozen shrugs out of it.
Do another set of light pullovers, twenty reps, after the deadlifts and shrugs.
That completes the program, and it looks like this:

1. Press behind neck 3 x 12
2. Squat 1 x 20
3. Pullover 1 x 20
4. Bench press 3 x 12
5. Rowing 3 x 15
6. Stiff legged deadlift 1 x 15
7. Pullover 1 x 20

Work hard on all the exercises, and work to your limit on the squats. Drink milk as
suggested earlier. Get lots of rest and sleep. Maintain a calm, tranquil mind and start saving
your money. You'll need it to buy bigger clothes.
In other articles, John McCullum stressed the importance of forcing the poundage on the
squat. He said to add five pounds every workout!

johnnynoname

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #1 on: November 04, 2008, 10:34:24 AM »
I think, for my metabolism at least, that bulking "old school" is the way to go and the idea of "lean bulking" is a fallacy

Bluto

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #2 on: November 04, 2008, 10:35:52 AM »
I'd like to hear true adonis views on bulking, he used to be fat at one time
Z

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #3 on: November 04, 2008, 10:39:47 AM »
Makes alot of sense,
Lean bulking takes too damn long, you can't see big changes, therefor you can go years looking pretty much the same,
Big weight changes = Big physique changes

"your just getting fat" these types of comments come from the guys whose measurements are the same year after year

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #4 on: November 04, 2008, 10:41:56 AM »

Lean bulking takes too damn long, you can't see big changes, therefor you can go years looking pretty much the same,


yes, that and for a person with a faster metabolism you will not see any results from "lean bulking"

i'm bulking now and i'm getting good results pulling a "lee priest in the offseason"

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #5 on: November 04, 2008, 10:46:30 AM »
yes, that and for a person with a faster metabolism you will not see any results from "lean bulking"

i'm bulking now and i'm getting good results pulling a "lee priest in the offseason"
Same here man,
I bin stuck at aroudn the same weight for ages, trying diff routines etc,
then i hit me......i need to gain some serious weight.
I am eating alot of junk,
but as long as i spread it out over the day, and dont have any 2000 cal binges, then i am fine

For me, food builds muscle

tbombz

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #6 on: November 04, 2008, 11:49:41 AM »
food is the most anabolic thing... of course youll gain size..

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #7 on: November 04, 2008, 11:52:01 AM »
Bulking Up --Strength & Health, November 1968. By John McCallum

Years ago, a fool proof method of bulking up was discovered. And yet gaining weight is a
major problem with bodybuilders today because the old method somehow got lost in the
shuffle. It's too bad, because gaining weight is really no problem. Bulking up is far and
away the easiest part of bodybuilding.

If you want to make use of some old gold and really apply yourself, you can gain lots of
weight. If you want to quit scratching around for something new for a couple of months,
you can get as bulky as you want.

Let's review the old method, and then we'll outline a program for you.

We can sum up the essentials very quickly. Squats and milk. That's the gist of it. Heavy
squats and lots of milk and never mind if the principle is years old.
If you're in doubt, let me tell you this. I get scores of letters from lifters around the country
who've tried the squats and milk program. They all say the same thing. They gained more
weight in a month on the squats and milk than they had in a year or more on other types of
programs.Gains of twenty to thirty pounds in a month are not uncommon. If you don't gain
at least ten pounds a month you're doing something wrong.

Lets take it piece by piece. We'll start with the milk bit.
The bodybuilders who don't gain well on milk usually fail because they misunderstand the
instructions to drink a lot of it. I've met a few men who thought a couple glasses was a lot.
That's not what I mean. When I say a lot of milk, I'm talking about a gallon or so a day. A
gallon of milk a day may sound excessive, and perhaps it is, but it's a sure guarantee of fast
gains.
You can even soup up the milk a bit by adding a few items to it; like a day's supply of
protein supplement, some ice cream or maybe some skim milk powder. Either way, just
make sure you drink a gallon a day.

The other essential to the program is the squat. This, like the milk, is often badly
misunderstood. Let's outline a bulking up routine for you, and discuss the squat in it's
proper place in the program.

You should start your program with a brief warmup. Spend about five minutes bending and
twisting, doing light repetition snatches or cleans, sit-ups, running in place, and so on.
Don't wear yourself out on the warmup. Just get your blood moving and a good feeling
about the whole thing.

Your first exercise is the press behind the neck. Do three sets of twelve reps.
Don't be frightened by the relatively high reps, and don't be stampeded into using low rep
stuff. The value of low reps has been greatly exaggerated. Moderately high reps, properly
used, provide umpteen times the growth stimulation, and are so much better for your health
that comparisons become ridiculous.

Do the presses in strict style with a medium width grip. Work hard on them and try to force
the poundage way up. There's no use kidding yourself on this or any other exercise. If you
use baby sized weights, then you can expect baby sized muscles. It's as simple as that and
there's no way out of it.
If you want respectable deltoid, trapezius, and triceps development, then you've got to work
up to about three-quarters of your body weight for the twelve reps. That means around 105
pounds for a 140 pound man, 120 pounds for a 160 pound man, 150 pounds for a 200
pound man, and so on. Nothing less will do. If you think it will, forget it.
The biggest fallacy in weight training is the foisted notion that you can build big powerful
muscles without hard work on heavy weights. You can't do it, brothers, and you're wasting
your time trying. If you're not gaining like you should, give your training poundages a long
hard look. The fault may be entirely yours.
Take a short rest after the presses. The next exercise is the big one, the key to the whole
thing, the squat. You'll do one set of twenty reps, in puff and pant style, with all the weight
you an handle.

Twenty rep squats are the solution to everybody's weight gaining problems. They'll
stimulate growth beyond belief if you work hard enough on them.
Warm up your knees with a few free squats and then start right in on the heavy stuff. Take
three huge gulping breaths between each rep. Hold the last breath and squat. Blast the air out
violently as you come erect.
Hold your head up and keep your back as flat as possible. Don't go below parallel position.
You should use a weight so heavy that the last five reps are doubtful. I continually get
letters from trainees complaining about their slow gains in bodyweight. Eventually I find
out they're using weights in the squat that an old lady with arthritis could lift.
You've gotta force the poundage. 150% of your bodyweight for twenty reps is rock bottom
minimum. That means 300 pounds for a 200 pound man. And remember, that's a minimum
figure. You should figure on going well above that.
As soon as you finish the squats, do twenty pullovers with a light weight. Twenty pounds or
so is plenty. All you want to do is give your rib box a good stretch.

The next exercise is the bench press. This exercise has been published enough so that you
shouldn't need any special instruction on it.
Do three sets in a rather loose style.
The next exercise is bent over rowing. Do three sets of fifteen in very strict style. Rest your
forehead on a block or lean it against a post or something to make sure you don't cheat. Use
a medium width grip and pull the bar to your lower abdomen.

The next exercise is the stiff legged deadlift. One set of fifteen reps. Do the deadlifts
standing on a bench or a high block so that you can go all the way down without the plates
hitting the floor. Concentrate on a full extension and contraction of your lower back.
Don't set the weight down when you finish the fifteen reps. Stand erect and do shoulder
shrugs until you grip gives out. You should be able to get at least a dozen shrugs out of it.
Do another set of light pullovers, twenty reps, after the deadlifts and shrugs.
That completes the program, and it looks like this:

1. Press behind neck 3 x 12
2. Squat 1 x 20
3. Pullover 1 x 20
4. Bench press 3 x 12
5. Rowing 3 x 15
6. Stiff legged deadlift 1 x 15
7. Pullover 1 x 20

Work hard on all the exercises, and work to your limit on the squats. Drink milk as
suggested earlier. Get lots of rest and sleep. Maintain a calm, tranquil mind and start saving
your money. You'll need it to buy bigger clothes.
In other articles, John McCullum stressed the importance of forcing the poundage on the
squat. He said to add five pounds every workout!

Old school baby.....old school 8)

tbombz

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Re: Bulking Up... Does this article make good sense?
« Reply #8 on: November 04, 2008, 11:54:26 AM »
 oh yeah but  FUCK THE SQUAT

goddamn its the most abnormal movement.. how the fuck can anybody get their arms behind them like that ??? and then to actually squat without fucking your back royally??? and besides the point that it only puts mass on my ass and doesnt do jack shit for my quads.... yeah all that combineed = i stick to hack squat leg press lunges leg extensions and variations of those..

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #9 on: November 04, 2008, 11:58:25 AM »
Old School Rulez!!! ;D

wavelength

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #10 on: November 04, 2008, 12:02:46 PM »
Go on a heavy bulk for one year and then diet down to 8%.
Go on a light bulk and do the same.

If you haven't done that and got better results from the heavy bulk, you don't know what works better.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #11 on: November 04, 2008, 12:06:02 PM »
Go on a heavy bulk for one year and then diet down to 8%.
Go on a light bulk and do the same.

If you haven't done that and got better results from the heavy bulk, you don't know what works better.
Why 8%?
10% is a good level for natural,
Abs showing, but not shredded,
easier to hold onto mass that way

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #12 on: November 04, 2008, 12:10:47 PM »
let me guess...

John McCallum was a drug user?

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #13 on: November 04, 2008, 12:13:00 PM »
8 pints of milk!  No wonder you grow, that's like 2200 cals and 220g protein, before you've even started on meals.

I might try this, I've always had trouble gaining weight!   8)


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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #14 on: November 04, 2008, 12:16:12 PM »
Why 8%?
10% is a good level for natural,
Abs showing, but not shredded,
easier to hold onto mass that way

I say 8% because if someone is estimated 8% (by himself or others), his real BF is usually between 7% and 10%. If someone is estimated 10% by others, his real BF is usually between 10% and 20%. You gotta come down to a level, where it is reasonable that what you see is what muscle is really there. Otherwise you have no chance of comparing your results from different methods. "Abs showing" is the worst method of determining youf BF. There are people with 25% BF and more with their abs showing in some poses.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #15 on: November 04, 2008, 12:22:01 PM »
I say 8% because if someone is estimated 8% (by himself or others), his real BF is usually between 7% and 10%. If someone is estimated 10% by others, his real BF is usually between 10% and 20%. You gotta come down to a level, where it is reasonable that what you see is what muscle is really there. Otherwise you have no chance of comparing your results from different methods. "Abs showing" is the worst method of determining youf BF. There are people with 25% BF and more with their abs showing in some poses.
What do you think Bob Paris' bodyfat is in this pic?
for me that is an ideal bf.


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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #16 on: November 04, 2008, 12:56:22 PM »
This article is stupid.

Putting on 10 pounds in a month - most of it's fat. If you eat correctly you can gain a good 1-3 pounds (depending upon where you are in development) and not looked like a beached whale.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #17 on: November 04, 2008, 01:02:13 PM »
What do you think Bob Paris' bodyfat is in this pic?
for me that is an ideal bf.

I would say 10-12%.

However, the point was how to compare results. IMO you can only compare results of different methods if you diet down to certain level, otherwise you could be e.g. 12% in the first try (bulk+cut) and 15% in the second. If you don't care what really works better, that's fine too of course.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #18 on: November 04, 2008, 01:10:04 PM »
i would say 9-10%, or even 8%.

i was 12% for ages and you could barely see abs.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #19 on: November 04, 2008, 01:19:36 PM »
bullshit article. it's like weight lifting masterbation. It's only meant to stoke that "meat head" mentality.

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #20 on: November 04, 2008, 02:07:08 PM »
bullshit article. it's like weight lifting masterbation. It's only meant to stoke that "meat head" mentality.

exactly
Its never that simple, someone with endomorphic characteristics would be better off to stay lean and build muscle up slowly rather than bulk up and add 10 lbs of fat. Whats the point of adding 10lbs of fat with only an additional pound of muscle, only to lose that pound of muscle when you diet down again?


The guys who advocate the old school bulking up diets were drug users.


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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #21 on: November 04, 2008, 02:09:57 PM »
exactly
Its never that simple, someone with endomorphic characteristics would be better off to stay lean and build muscle up slowly rather than bulk up and add 10 lbs of fat. Whats the point of adding 10lbs of fat with only an additional pound of muscle, only to lose that pound of muscle when you diet down again?


The guys who advocate the old school bulking up diets were drug users.



i agree as I usually maintain 2.5-3 pounds (tops) of any muscle I gain once I start eating normal again

I'm sure it would be easier for me to put on lean mass if I could afford a cycle/find a "hook up" but until that happens, i'm gonna stick with bulking than cutting (at least this winter)

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #22 on: November 04, 2008, 02:41:23 PM »
Most people will never sqaut 300 for reps, let alone 20 :o :o

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #23 on: November 04, 2008, 02:41:57 PM »
John McCallum was very old school, and his advice is usually very good, but becareful with this. The old ideals of bulking cared nothing about physical appearence. Almost all of the fellas that followed these diets looked like fat doughboys at the end.

For instance, Joe Hise, the patron saint of "breathing squats and milk" crowd, had something like a 50" inch chest and 42" waist at the end of his bulking program. Big and strong, yes, but 99% of Getbig would've laughed at his physique.

Slow bulks are the way to go.  

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Re: Bulking Up, 1968 style
« Reply #24 on: November 04, 2008, 03:54:32 PM »
McCallum wrote a series of monthly articles for Strength & Health back in the late 60`s to early 70`s,all similar to the above article.

The column was called "Keys To Progress" as was his book which was composed of the same published articles.

I own the book and some of the mags..........good reading but lots of outdated stuff as well as some tried and true old school shit that will kick most people ass..................all basic free weight stuff.